CHISINAU/TBILISI (Reuters) - Undeterred by
the conflict triggered by Ukraine's swing towards Europe, the former
Soviet republics of Moldova and Georgia will sign a trade and political
pact with the European Union this month with Russia warning both
countries against the move.

The two small countries - Moldova has a population of just over
3.5 million and Georgia 4.5 million - see the signing of an
association agreement as the crucial step towards mainstream Europe,
leading to eventual membership of the powerful EU trading bloc.

But, as has been shown by their regional neighbor Ukraine, Russia
sees their westward move further away from Moscow's sphere of
influence as a geo-political setback that could threaten its markets
too.

Last November, Russia persuaded a now-ousted Ukrainian leader to
pull out of an identical pact with the EU. When protests then chased
him from office, Russia, in a backlash, annexed Crimea, and armed
pro-Russian separatist groups sprang up in Ukraine's east and the
battle there is still raging.

How Russia - which went to war with Georgia in 2008 - will react now
remains the big unknown but officials have warned of "possible
consequences".

With Moldova and Georgia harboring pro-Russian breakaway enclaves
themselves within their borders - all of which are hankering after
union with Russia and look askance on EU association - both states
have valid grounds for concern from a Russian response to the June
27 signature.

"I am afraid Russia may create some problems in Georgia before the
signing. We need to be very careful this month. The Russians did it
many times before," said Guram Chichinadze, a 57-year-old
businessman, sipping coffee downtown in Tbilisi.

Moldova fears Moscow might impose visa requirements on Moldovan
citizens working in Russia - something which would immediately
strangle a valued source of income into its struggling economy.

Or Russia might extend a ban on imports of Moldovan wines - already
in place since September last year - to include fruit and vegetable
that could hurt another source of export income in the land-locked
country.

In the case of Georgia - which, unlike Moldova, has no borders with
the EU and is less dependent on Russia for energy - the biggest
fears are political rather than economic.

Having been frustrated in its desire to join the U.S.-led bloc NATO
and with the 2008 war with Russia behind it, Georgia would seem to
be more vulnerable as a Russian target now.

Politicians in Tbilisi see a possible threat coming from Russia
absorbing the Abkhazia and South Ossetia regions - both now
recognized by Moscow but by few other countries as independent
states - in a Crimea-style move.

"There is an aggressive attitude from Russia not only towards us,
but towards any ex-Soviet state which has European aspirations. But
this does not mean that we will reject our free choice," said Irakly
Sesiashvili, the head of the parliamentary defense and security
committee.

FIRM COMMITMENT

With both states however firmly committed to signing the agreement
in Brussels, it would seem too late for anything more from Russia
now other than warnings of damage to their economies. But the
consequences of signature might follow swiftly.

Joining a free trade zone with the EU and with the prospect of
cheaper imports of consumer goods from Europe will bring only
long-term benefits rather than overnight miracles to help Moldova
and Georgia's struggling economies.

That is recognized by their leaders who emphasize more its political
significance and symbolism.

Moldova, for instance, sees, down the road, the prospect of EU
funding helping it to modernize its vital agricultural sector.

"These agreements mark the beginning of a process, not the end of
one. But the symbolism of a signed agreement in Brussels is enormous
- and that is why both Georgia and Moldova are so eager to have it,"
said Thomas de Waal, an independent analyst from the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace think-tank.

Moldovan Prime Minister Iurie Leanca told Reuters in an interview
his country would keep pressing for deeper ties with the EU.

"The signing of the agreement is not the final full-stop in our
European aspirations. The next step is even more important -
receiving the status of a candidate member of the EU," he said.

"The day after signing we will actively and effectively start
working to get this status."

European commission President Jose Manuel Barroso travels to both
countries this week to square away arrangements before their leaders
visit Brussels for the signing.

Of the two, the most important for Russia is Moldova because of the
greater pro-Russian tendencies in its society and the proximity of
Romania - a member of the NATO military bloc as well as the EU - on
its western border.

Heavily dependent on gas supplies from Russia,
it has been governed since 2009 by various pro-Western coalitions.
Even the opposition communists have now publicly supported
signatures of the pact.

Attending a Russia-Moldova joint economic meeting late last year,
Dmitry Rogozin, a Russian deputy prime minister and Kremlin envoy to
Transdniestria, warned Moldova against not being too quick to rush
into the EU.

"Traveling at such a speed, a locomotive can lose its rear
carriages," he said.

But opinion polls in Moldova show as many as 45 percent of the
population would prefer membership of the Russia-led Customs Union
rather than a European future.

In one southern region inhabited by about 140,000 ethnic Gagauz, a
Turkic people, an overwhelming majority of voters in an illegal
referendum voted for integration into the Russian-led Customs Union
last February.

TRUMP CARD

But Russia's biggest trump card lies in Transdniestria, a ragged
Russian-speaking strip of land running down Moldova's eastern border
with Ukraine where opposition to the pro-Western policies of the
Chisinau government runs strong.

With a population of about 500,000 it is home to at least 1,200
Russian soldiers who guard tonnes of Soviet-era weaponry and
ammunition. Commentators in Chisinau see it is as a sleeping dog
that could swiftly be aroused if Moscow wished to foment unrest
among Russian-speakers in the region.

"Over the longer term I think we can expect Russia trying to build
up a stronger constituency in domestic politics in Georgia and
supporting anti-European parties," said de Waal.

"Moldova is under much greater pressure and Russia has more cards to
play there. Transdniestria has applied to join the Russian
Federation and can be exploited."

Whether Russia has now quietly accepted the inevitability of a
signature by the two states later in June is not clear. Nor is it
known what retaliatory steps - possibly in trade restrictions of
some sort - Moscow might make.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is scheduled, however, to
visit Chisinau on either June 17 or 18, giving him a last chance to
spell out Moscow's view.

"It is Georgia's sovereign right to sign the Association Agreement
with the EU, but it should also understand possible consequences,"
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich told a news
conference last month.

"Georgia's sovereign rights should be exercised without damaging the
rights of others ... It is very important to understand the
consequences which the upcoming signing of the Association Agreement
between Georgia and the EU on June 27 may have."